There is hope amidst environmental anxiety, says a scholar of ecotheology

From Eurekalert

University of Helsinki

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IMAGE: Consistent efforts to achieve something better may also have positive effects on personal wellbeing, assesses environmental researcher Panu Pihkala. Credit: Mika Federley, University of Helsinki

Eco-anxiety encompasses difficult emotions experienced to a significant degree due to environmental issues. Environmental researcher Panu Pihkala says that related symptoms can be positioned between two extremes:

“At one extreme are the serious symptoms, such as shock and fear, which often have psychophysical manifestations, including sleep disorders and physical discomfort. At the other extreme there are less severe symptoms, such as melancholia and restlessness.”

Any watertight causalities of eco-anxiety related to health are difficult to prove, although a recent doctoral dissertation (in Finnish only) by Reija Ruuhela indicates that climate change may even heighten the risk of suicide.

“The human mind is such a complex entity that, for example, in health care the environmental origin of anxiety symptoms has long been downplayed,” Pihkala notes.

Pihkala is working as a postdoctoral researcher at the Faculty of Theology, University of Helsinki. He has paid much attention to the indirect effects and symptoms of eco-anxiety, applying through his multidisciplinary approach, for example, theories of grief and loss to empirical data.

In Finland, wide-ranging data acquisition associated with the phenomenon has been conducted under the annually published Youth Barometer scheme.

“My research has validated the assumption that a lot of young people are suffering from fear and anxiety related to climate change,” Pihkala says.

Who are the most affected by ecoanxiety?

Groups of people particularly exposed to mental strain stemming from environmental problems have been described in studies focused on eco-anxiety.

“One key group is children and adolescents whose mental processing capacity is still developing, making their potential for personal actions in the world of adults limited,” notes Pihkala.

Another group is comprised of those who are in close contact with ecosystems due to either their livelihood or lifestyle.

“These individuals include farmers, professional fishermen, hunters, indigenous peoples and nature lovers,” Pihkala lists.

In Pihkala’s opinion, what in particular causes anxiety is finding something to be a problem without a sufficient ability to react or do anything about it.

Strain caused by environmental concern varies around the world

Klimatångest (article in Swedish only), a term literally denoting ‘climate angst’, has become established in the Swedish language. In Sweden, significant research of high international importance that applies psychology and environmental education is being conducted on the climate change-related survival mechanisms of children and adolescents.

Then again, a field study carried out in a Norwegian community indicated that attitudes towards climate change involve self-inflicted emotional numbness. This is the topic of Living in Denial: Climate Change, Emotions, and Everyday Life, a book by sociologist Kari Marie Norgaard.

Norgaard found in her studies serious conflicts between the charitable Nordic image and identity, and the impact of the fossil economy and oil industry on climate change, humans and ecosystems across the globe.

“In Norway, the emotional load has already been accumulated to such an extent that the whole issue is difficult to process,” Pihkala summarises.

On the international level, various researchers are taking different approaches to eco-anxiety. Some are speaking of the psychological or psychiatric effects of environmental problems.

Pihkala highlights the ‘how to live with climate change’ manuals drawn up in Australia on the basis of scientific research.

“Tensions in Australia are high. The fossil economy in the country is strong, combined with unusually powerful severe weather phenomena. For example, studies conducted among Australian farmers have, at worst, indicated suicidal tendencies caused by climate change.”

How to channel concern about the environment into action?

The bias of cognitive brain function underlies the oppressive nature of environmental issues.

“The human mind has evolved to effectively react to concrete threats, but its response to ambiguous threats occurring over a long period of time is poor,” Pihkala explains.

Feelings of impotence may also be caused by considering personal acts insignificant on the global scale.

According to Pihkala, what this often boils down to is trying to rid oneself of a difficult issue: if individuals succeed in convincing themselves of the irrelevance of their actions, they can remain inactive.

Based on survey data, trying to achieve such a goal often fails, as existing research findings already indicate, for example, that the climate and consumption choices of Finnish households are far from insignificant in the big picture.

“Consistent efforts to achieve something better may also have positive effects on personal wellbeing,” assesses Pihkala.

For dealing with eco-anxiety, the researcher has his own advice.

“People are very relieved when they have the opportunity to process oppressive emotions without the restraints of roles that are considered socially acceptable and that restrict common sense. Various performances and rituals, art and even theology provide excellent pathways to achieving this.”

Social support may also play an important role in relation to eco-anxiety: by being part of a larger community that aims to do its best, individuals can limit the strain caused by overbearing problems.

“Of course, we cannot decide in the Nordic countries what measures will be taken elsewhere in the world, but we could have a chance to serve as an inspiring example of environmental ethics to others. In Finland, conversations about climate change have lately gained prevalence even in everyday situations. Certain people are wondering what they could do, others are demanding further political decisions. This is a clear sign of hope,” Pihkala says.

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Al miller
December 16, 2018 11:41 am

Absolutele lunacy such as this is always the result of too much money being available for anyone willing to to toe the lie. Madness.
The next world war has started in France already. Unfortunately for them they are further into the pain of globalization than we are yet…but Justin and his Butt buddy are doing their best to bankrupt Canada, which I am certain is part of the plan along with importing as many third world Muslims as they can. Vive le Yellow Jackets!

Alan Tomalty
Reply to  Al miller
December 16, 2018 12:07 pm

email me via Twitter

Reply to  Al miller
December 16, 2018 2:14 pm

Al miller

The more recent Brussels demonstrations are more direct. They’re directed at immigration.

Things are getting nasty in Western Europe. Brexit could be the powder keg if our UK government isn’t careful.

They have two options left on the table right now but are searching for more.

1. No deal Brexit, in other words we just leave the EU with no trade or customs deals, we just bug out. As one of the largest three contributors and participants in the EU, that’s a big deal for them as they lose, essentially 30% of their trade. (I’m talking very roughly here) which to any other business is a fatal blow.

2. The British government calls another referendum, the reasons for which are now becoming clear. They can’t call a referendum which addresses the same issues as the first i.e. in Europe or out Europe because that would cause riots in the streets by 17.6 million people who voted leave. They must call a referendum on the deal our Prime Minister has struck with Europe to establish if it’s the right deal, which will inevitably lead to yet more prevarication, obfuscation and another opportunity to remain in Europe, despite the democratic will to leave.

Option 1. The British people will largely accept.
Option 2. Or any variation thereof, will likely lead to a mass uprising.

I wonder if there are 17.6M yellow jackets in the UK.

Tasfay Martinov
December 16, 2018 1:39 pm

I applaud Panu’s initiative.
The alarmists have abused a generation by sowing fear and anxiety about a fantastical climate catastrophe, which in some susceptible individuals reaches the level of serious psychological injury.
Rather than jumping into the science or politics of climate, Panu has reached out to those psychologically abused by the catastrophist circus.
Also it takes courage for a theologian to enter the public space and inevitably suffer some ridicule for his religious belief.
A courageous and compassionate effort – well done Panu!

Steve Reddish
December 16, 2018 2:19 pm

“Feelings of impotence may also be caused by considering personal acts insignificant on the global scale.

According to Pihkala, what this often boils down to is trying to rid oneself of a difficult issue: if individuals succeed in convincing themselves of the irrelevance of their actions, they can remain inactive.”

I think he is saying:

1) People get feelings of anxiety when they realize there is nothing they can do to fix the climate.

2) They are cured of this anxiety when they accept there is nothing they can do to fix the climate.

Of course, I say there is nothing they need do, because the climate does not need fixing.

SR

Luke of the D
Reply to  Steve Reddish
December 17, 2018 9:25 am

But there is something to fix: the belief that there is something wrong and that opposing groups have all the power to implement answers that you KNOW are wrong. This swords swings both ways. I am just a random guy: a geologist who works for a petroleum company. I know geology and geography and have a great understanding of perceptions of time and risk, but I also know I am a minor bit player with no power. Call it a conspiracy or just plain paranoia, but I have “climate angst” in the opposite direction – I fear the idiots in control will ruin the climate for us and the generations to come. It is a legitimate fear. And it is truly causing me problems. I know there is nothing I can do about it (#1), but letting go of that which you cannot control (#2) is INSANLY difficult to do.

Sheri
December 16, 2018 2:50 pm

Seems if we just don’t tell them……You know, like the good old days when tornadoes in Kansas, hurricanes in Florida and blizzards in North Dakota were “just how it is”. Best not to “enlighten” people and they will go merrily along, adapting and dealing.

Edwin
December 16, 2018 4:59 pm

Gee, I wonder how high the anxiety would rise in Norway if their oil and therefor a large portion of their GDP was turned off.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Edwin
December 16, 2018 6:03 pm

BINGO!

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Edwin
December 16, 2018 8:46 pm

If it wasn’t for oil, Norway could not afford it’s very generous welfare system, free education and health.

Reply to  Patrick MJD
December 16, 2018 9:49 pm

They could always go back to whaling. Whale oil isn’t fossil fuel.

Ronald Ginzler
December 16, 2018 5:10 pm

I’m going to write a sequel to “Living in Denial: Climate Change, Emotions, and Everyday Life.” It will be titled “Living in Denali: Climate Change, Emotions, and Everyday Life.” If I survive the winter.

Flight Level
December 16, 2018 5:26 pm

Hold about, one can make a living by practicing ecotheology ?

Columbia University babbles “New movements in modern theological scholarship direct attention to the biological realm as well as the spiritual ..”

Hey, have they gone THAT low in their quest for universal mind control ?

Ok. starting a new business: -Perfect looking ecotheology diplomas, no questions asked, apply below.

H.R.
Reply to  Flight Level
December 16, 2018 6:50 pm

Link, please? I want one.

H.R.
Reply to  H.R.
December 16, 2018 7:04 pm

P.S. I promise that my frock will be made of recycled plastic grocery bags, hang the itchiness. I have not yet decided on which way my collar will be turned… contemplating ‘cool dude’ eco-Priest look, sans shirt with sandals and jammers and lots of sick tats. Services Sundays at 10:00am and Thursdays at 7:30pm. Everyone welcome. Praise Gaia!

[do I really need winky here?]

Patrick MJD
December 16, 2018 5:57 pm

It was not so long ago that we had real issues to worry about such as dirty water, disease, starvation and war. Now we have so much time on our hands, mostly free of hunger, disease and war we have to invent stuff to worry about.

“At one extreme are the serious symptoms, such as shock and fear, which often have psychophysical manifestations, including sleep disorders and physical discomfort. At the other extreme there are less severe symptoms, such as melancholia and restlessness.”

Largely brought about by alarmist media and the human desire to “feel” and “belong”, or be part of “something bigger than us” and be “connected”. People really do need to switch off and drop out, go for a walk along a beach in the rain.

John Sandhofner
December 16, 2018 5:59 pm

“My research has validated the assumption that a lot of young people are suffering from fear and anxiety related to climate change,” Pihkala says.” The sad part is this is all a self-induced problem. It would seem that there must not be much of a push back by many of the Finland people.How sad that so many people are suffering needlessly.

Craig from Oz
December 16, 2018 6:12 pm

“This is the topic of Living in Denial: Climate Change, Emotions, and Everyday Life, a book by sociologist Kari Marie Norgaard.”

I tried Living in Denial once. They Egyptian Police told me to stop upsetting the fish and to get back on dry land.

Jokes aside the more you read ‘research’ like this the more you start to wonder if the only useful function of Higher Education is to keep unemployable people off the streets.

December 16, 2018 7:00 pm

The “Dreaded Pause^тм” caused an epidemic of “Climate Blues” among climate scientists a decade ago. They rationalized they were looking Thermageddon in the face every day with their studies and they took ill because no one would listen! How many 100s of millions more did they need to listen? Nearly all the MSM, all the worlds universities and technical societies, 200 national governments, all the NGOs, every public school, astorisked Nobek Prizes and a host of other awards were dished out, Hollywood….

What was really going on was classic psychological D*Nile, one of the most well researched of diagnoses in the therapeutic field. The Pause stretching over 18yrs, longer than the warming period we were sweating about and during which CO2 rose 35% was wearing on the minds of lesser fortitude among climate scientists. Had they wasted 20 years in study an another 20 in careers only to be betrayed so cruelly by Mother Nature? The mind is niggling you to consider a logical explanation and you make yourself sick fending it off.

In this article we are seeing the terrible psychological harm deliberately done to innocent children, the engendering of fear and self loathing in a terrible brainwashing strategy by the keft to twist the education system promote a political agenda. I countered this every step of the way with my children and now my grandchildren, teaching them to think for themselves and to have a healthy scepticism of this stuff. Why is it that psychologists have bought into this awful plan and become enablers.

SAMURAI
December 16, 2018 7:37 pm

At least some Leftists are being “honest” about their failed ideology being a religious belief rather than a failed political philosophy..

In Leftists’ Post-Modern Religion, the neat trick is that empirical evidence is no longer required to validate their strongly-held beliefs (aka “Their Truth”)…

All that is required for “validation” is a demonstration their beliefs are strongly held, which magically transmutes their strong beliefs into “Their Truth”…. “Their Truth” supersedes any objective reality under their Post-Modern religious precept of moral and ethical relativism…

History shows “Their Truth” is a very dangerous religious belief, which ended with Leftist governments murdering 100 million “non-believers” in the 20th century..

Let’s learn from history rather than repeat it, shall we?

December 17, 2018 4:14 am

I don’t understand why people get upset or scared by the myth of Global warming etc.

Some 40 years ago when this was first becoming a issue I studied the properties of the molecule CO2. It was soon clear that it did not actually store het energy, but simply re–radiated it. Also it was 100 % essential to all life on Earth first by it being both a essential plant food and also being the number one chemical in all life forms.

Following on from that was the whole of the Global warming come climate change , come extreme weather, the whole matter was clearly one giant scam.

The matter was embraced by academia as their left wing thinking could see the political possibilities in it, by the Media who love frightening us as it sells the adverts which enables newspapers or r TV air time to exist, and of course the politicians who always want something to scare us with, promising us of course that if only we will vote for them then all will be well.

Now of course with the Greens blob appearing to be winning, we are starting to see the problems ahead. . A decrease in the energy needed to keep our present lifestyle going.
But its all so simple if only we go back to what its all about, that gas CO2 and its properties.

MJE

KT66
December 17, 2018 5:42 am

Eco-Theology! = LOL!

michael hart
December 17, 2018 8:14 am

Any watertight causalities of eco-anxiety related to health are difficult to prove, although a recent doctoral dissertation (in Finnish only)…

Thank god for that. I do hope it is also pay-walled.

Johann Wundersamer
December 26, 2018 2:42 am

Theologians know the problem “faith crisis”,

they must be able to deal with it as with post-traumatic stress disorders.

That’s how the Green Belivers will have to go their own way, lonely. Too.

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